- #1
wasteofo2
- 478
- 2
I've been reading about the physics of sound. Perhaps I'm just reading an overly simplified version of the truth, but it would seem to me that as the particles of the medium sound is traveling through compress and expand, inevitably bumping into each other, that they would loose some kinetic energy in the form of heat and over distance, eventually become less rapid. Obviously, sound doesn't act like this (or does to a small degree, not easily detectable by humans), but it seems to me that it should. The way I view it it seems that a wave should spread out, becomming less focused and quieter over time, as well as having a smaller frequency due to the particles colliding with each other giving up kinetic energy by hitting each other.